totter: v. walk unsteadily or feebly; stagger; sway, as if about to falltractable: a. easily managed or controlled; governable; easily handled or worked; dociletraduce: v. cause disgrace to by malicious and false statements; hold up or expose to ridicule or calumny; defametranscribe: v. copy; write over again in same wordstransgress: v. pass over or beyond; surpasstransient: a. remaining only for a brief timetranslucent: a. partly transparent; transmitting rays of light without permitting objects to be distinctly seentransmute: v. change from one form, nature, substance, or state into another; transformtraumatize: v. wound or injure a tissue, as in a surgical operationtravail: n. painful labor; work, especially when arduous or involving painful efforttreacle: n. remedy against poison; writing or music that is excessively sweet and sentimental; pale cane syruptreason: n. rhe crime of betraying one’s own countrytreatise: n. systematic, usually extensive written discourse on a subjecttremulous: a. marked by trembling, quivering, or shaking; timid or fearful; timoroustrenchant: a. forceful, effective, and vigorous; sharp or keentrepidation: n. state of alarm or dread; nervous apprehension; involuntary trembling or quiveringtributary: n. branch that flows into the main stream; tending to bring about; being partly responsible fortribute: n. gift, payment, declaration, or other acknowledgment of gratitude, respect, or admirationtricolor: n. a flag having three colorstrounce: v. win by wide margin; beat thoroughly or heavily; punish or beat severelytruculence: n. aggressiveness; ferocity; ferociously cruel actions or behaviortruculent: a. disposed to fight; belligerent; aggressively hostiletrudge: v. walk or march with labor; jog along; move wearilytruism: n. undoubted or self-evident truth; obvious truthtrumpeting: n. publishing by or as by sounding a trumpet; resounding call, as that of the elephanttruncate: v. cut the top off; make shorter as if by cutting offtundra: n. treeless area between the icecap and the tree line of Arctic regions, having a permanently frozen subsoilturbid: a. muddy; having sediment disturbed; heavy, dark, or dense, as smoke or fogturgid: a. swollen; distended; excessively ornate or complex in style or languageturpitude: n. depravity; corrupt, depraved, or degenerate act

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